Jack Griffin‘s 34-yard field goal on the game’s final play gave Florida International a stunning 34-32 win over Toledo last night in the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl in Detroit.

The Golden Panthers faced fourth-and-17 on their final drive before picking up the first down on a hook-and-lateral to T.Y. Hilton. Replays showed he might have stepped out of bounds short along the sideline, but the play stood after a review, putting the ball at the Toledo 42.

Toledo (8-5) took the lead with 1:14 left on a touchdown run by Terrance Owens and a 2-point conversion pass to Eric Page.

NFL: Rams game flexed

The Rams game at Seattle to decide the NFC West title has been moved to prime time this Sunday by the NFL.

Under its flexible scheduling policy, the NFL switched the game to 8:20 p.m. (ET) on NBC.

Also flexed on Sunday will be Jacksonville at Houston and Tennessee at Indianapolis to 4:15 (ET) on CBS, Chicago at Green Bay, Dallas at Philadelphia and the Giants at Washington on Fox.

NHL: Turgeon kin killed

New Mexico State Police say the 18-year-old daughter of former Islanders center Pierre Turgeon was killed when the pickup truck she was driving crashed into the trailer of a semi-truck at an intersection. Police say Elizabeth Turgeon of Cherry Hill Village, Colo., died at the scene about 100 miles east of Albuquerque early Thursday. A passenger in the pickup was transported to University of New Mexico Hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Turgeon’s father played 19 seasons with Buffalo, the Islanders, Montreal, St. Louis, Dallas and Colorado, scoring 515 goals with 812 assists in 1,294 games.

MLB: Webb joins Texas

Free-agent pitcher Brandon Webb, according to ESPN, agreed to a one-year contract with the Rangers, pending a physical.

From 2006 to ’08, while pitching for Arizona, Webb won one Cy Young Award and finished second twice. He has missed all but four innings of the past two seasons with shoulder problems.

ETC.: Bud Greenspan dies

Bud Greenspan, the filmmaker whose documentaries often soared as triumphantly as the Olympic athletes he chronicled for more than six decades, died at his home in New York City. He was 84. He died Saturday from complications of Parkinson’s disease, companion Nancy Beffa said.